Site icon Techplayon

LoRa- (Long Range) Network and Protocol Architecture & Frame Structure

LoRa is Long Range ,low data rate, low power wireless platform technology for building IoT network. It uses unlicensed radio spectrum in the Industrial, Scientific and Medical (ISM) bands to enable communication between remote sensors and gateways connected to the network Server and Application Servers.

LoRa technology is owned by a chip company – Semtech, who acquired it from another French startup – Cycleo. Semtech has formed the LoRa Alliance, which develops global standards and makes this available under a royalty free license to its members. Semtech builds LoRa Technology into its chipsets. These chipsets are then built into the products offered by our vast network of IoT partners and integrated into LPWANs from mobile network operators worldwide.

LoRa Network Architecture

LoRa Network is shown in picture below:

LoRa network uses a star topology in which an end node can send messages to multiple gateways that communicate with the network server. Since an end node does not belong to a specific gateway, more than one gateway can receive a message sent by an end devices. LoRa radio access technology is used in communications between an end device and the gateways. The gateways and network server are connected via standard IP connections.

LoRa Protocol Architecture

LoRa protocol specification is developed by the LoRa Alliance. The end to end network protocol architecture is shown below. LoRaWAN’s protocol consists of a MAC Layer and an Application Layer, and it operates based on the LoRa physical layer.

Frame Structure

LoRa protocol frame structure for Physical Layer, MAC Layer and Higher Layer is shown in below picture.

Frame Header contains the following information.

LoRa Technology Applications

References

  1. Lora-alliance Resource-Hub
  2. On the Limits of LoRaWAN Channel Access
  3. A Dual Key-Based Activation Scheme for Secure LoRaWAN

Related Post

Exit mobile version